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Non-Member Articles |
Grounding is key
to good reception
From: jpd@space.mit.edu (John Doty)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.shortwave
July 2004
With grounds
the most common experience is "the more the merrier".
As you add more, however, you usually reach a diminishing returns
(no pun intended) situation where there is no *observable* improvement:
that's usually a good place to stop. There are also exceptional
circumstances where grounding increases noise problems, but these,
in my experience, are much rarer than the pundits who preach against
"ground loops" seem to think.
Even a semi-quantitative theoretical treatment of grounding in oversimplified
situations requires heavy math at RF. Experimentation is thus required
even if one has done elaborate calculations. It's often easier to
use the theory as a guide to what to try, and then experiment.
What's ground? If connect the shield of my coax (which is grounded
outside) to the antenna input of my R8, I hear lots of junk, indicating
that there is an RF voltage difference between the coax shield and
the R8 chassis. Last night this measured about S5.5, which is about
-93 dBm (preamp off, 6KHz bandwidth). That's a lot of noise: it
was 18 dB above my antenna's "noise floor", and 26 dB
above the receiver's noise floor.
This sort of disagreement about ground potential is characteristic
of electrically noisy environments. The receiver will, of course,
respond to any voltage input that differs from its chassis ground.
The antenna, on the other hand, is in a very different environment,
and will have its own idea of what ground potential is. If you want
to avoid noise pickup, you need to deliver a signal, referenced
at the antenna to whatever its ground potential is, in such a way
that when it arrives at the receiver, the reference potential is
now the receiver's chassis potential.
Coaxial cable represents one way to do this. Coax has two key properties:
1. The voltage between the inner conductor and the shield depends
only on the state of the electromagnetic field within the shield.
2. The shield prevents the external electromagnetic field from influencing
the internal electromagnetic field (but watch out at the ends of
the cable!).
So, it's easy, right? Run coax from the antenna to the receiver.
Ground at the antenna end will be whatever the antenna thinks it
is, while ground at the receiver end will be whatever the receiver
thinks it is. The antenna will produce the appropriate voltage difference
at the input side, and the receiver will see that voltage difference
uncontaminated by external fields, according to the properties given
above.
Unfortunately, it doesn't quite work that way. It's all true as
far as it goes, but it neglects the fact that the coax can also
guide noise from your house to your antenna, where it can couple
back into the cable and into your receiver. To see how this works,
let me first describe how this noise gets around.
The noise I'm talking about here is more properly called "broadband
electromagnetic interference" (EMI). It's made by computers,
lamp dimmers, televisions, motors and other modern gadgets. I have
all these things. In many cases, I can't get them turned off, because
it would provoke intrafamilal rebellion. However, even when I turn
them off, the noise in the house doesn't go down very much, because
my neighbors all have them too. In any case, one of the worst offenders
is my computer, which is such a handy radio companion I'm not about
to turn *it* off.
Some of this noise is radiated, but the more troublesome component
of this is conducted noise that follows utility wires. Any sort
of cable supports a "common mode" of electromagnetic energy
transport in which all of the conductors in the cable are at the
some potential, but that potential differs from the potential of
other nearby conductors ("ground"). The noise sources
of concern generate common mode waves on power, telephone, and CATV
cables which then distribute these waves around your neighborhood.
They also generate "differential" mode waves, but simple
filters can block these so they aren't normally a problem.
So, let's say you have a longwire antenna attached to a coaxial
cable through an MLB ("Magnetic Longwire Balun" [sic]).
Suppose your next door neighbor turns on a dimmer switch. The resulting
RF interference travels out his power lines, in through yours, through
your receiver's power cord to its chassis, and out your coaxial
cable to your MLB. Now on coax, a common mode wave is associated
with a current on the shield only, while the mode we want the signal
to be in, the "differential" mode, has equal but opposite
currents flowing on shield and inner conductor. The MLB works by
coupling energy from a current flowing between the antenna wire
and the coax shield into into the differential mode. But wait a
second: the current from the antenna flows on the coax shield just
like the common mode current does. Does this mean that the antenna
mode is contaminated with the noise from your neighbor's dimmer?
The answer is a resounding (and unpleasant) yes! The way wire receiving
antennas work is by first moving energy from free space into a common
mode moving along the antenna wire, and then picking some of that
off and coupling it into a mode on the feedline. In this case, the
common mode current moving along the antenna wire flows into the
common mode of the coax, and vice versa. The coax is not just feedline:
it's an intimate part of the antenna! Furthermore, as we've seen,
it's connected back through your electrical wiring to your neighbor's
dimmer switch. You have a circuitous but electrically direct connection
to this infernal noise source. No wonder it's such a nuisance!
The solution is to somehow isolate the antenna from the common mode
currents on the feedline. One common way to do this is with a balanced
"dipole" antenna. Instead of connecting the feedline to
the wire at the end, connect it to the middle. Now the antenna current
can flow from one side of the antenna to the other, without having
to involve the coax shield. Unfortunately, removing the necessity
of having the coax be part of the antenna doesn't automatically
isolate it: a coax-fed dipole is often only slightly quieter than
an end-fed longwire. A "balun", a device which blocks
common mode currents from the feedline, is often employed. This
can improve the situation considerably. Note that this is not the
same device as the miscalled "Magnetic Longwire Balun".
Another way is to ground the coaxial shield, "short circuiting"
the common mode. Antenna currents flow into such a ground freely,
in principle not interacting with noise currents. The best ground
for such a purpose will be a earth ground near the antenna and far
from utility lines.
Still another way is to block common mode waves by burying the cable.
Soil is a very effective absorber of RF energy at close range.
Unfortunately, none of these methods is generally adequate by itself
in the toughest cases. Baluns are not perfectly effective at blocking
common mode currents. Even the best balun can be partially defeated
if there's any other unsymmetrical coupling between the antenna
and feedline. Such coupling can occur if the feedline doesn't come
away from the antenna at a right angle. Grounds are not perfect
either. Cable burial generally lets some energy leak through. A
combination of methods is usually required, both encouraging the
common mode currents to take harmless paths (grounding) and blocking
them from the harmful paths (baluns and/or burial).
The required isolation to reach the true reception potential of
the site can be large. According to the measurements I quoted above,
for my site the antenna noise floor is 18 dB below the conducted
noise level at 10 MHz. 18 dB of isolation would thus make the levels
equal, but we want to do better than that: we want the pickup of
common mode EMI to be insignificant, at least 5 dB down from the
antenna's floor. In my location the situation gets worse at higher
frequencies as the natural noise level drops and therefore I become
more sensitive: even 30 dB of isolation isn't enough to completely
silence the common mode noise (but 36 dB *is* enough, except at
my computer's CPU clock frequency of 25 MHz).
Getting rid of the conducted noise can make a huge difference in
the number and kinds of stations you can pick up: the 18 dB difference
between the conducted and natural noise levels in the case above
corresponds to the power difference between a 300 kW major world
broadcaster and a modest 5 kW regional station.
The method I use is to ground the cable shield at two ground stakes
and bury the cable in between. The scheme of alternating blocking
methods with grounds will generally be the most effective. The ground
stake near the house provides a place for the common mode noise
current to go, far from the antenna where it cannot couple significantly.
The ground stake at the base of my inverted-L antenna provides a
place for the antenna current to flow, at a true ground potential
relative to the antenna potential. The buried coax between these
two points blocks noise currents.
I'm no expert on electrical codes, and codes differ in different
countries. However, I believe that any such requirement must refer
only to grounds used for safety in an electric power distribution
system: I do not believe this applies to RF grounds.
Remember that proper grounding practice for electrical wiring has
very little to do with RF grounding. The purpose of an electrical
ground is to be at a safe potential (a few volts) relative to non-electrical
grounded objects like plumbing. At an operating frequency of 50/60
Hz, it needs to have a low enough impedance (a fraction of an ohm)
that in case of a short circuit a fuse or breaker will blow immediately.
At RF such low impedances are essentially impossible: even a few
centimeters of thick wire is likely to exhibit an inductive impedance
in the ohm range at 10 MHz (depends sensitively on the locations
and connections of nearby conductors). Actual ground connections
to real soil may exhibit resistive impedances in the tens of ohms.
Despite this, a quiet RF ground needs to be within a fraction of
a microvolt of the potential of the surrounding soil. This is difficult,
and that's why a single ground is often not enough.
If you have a "ground loop". It's harmless. In case of
a nearby lightning strike it may actually save your receiver. My
R8 isn't grounded like that, so I had to take steps to prevent the
coax ground potential from getting wildly out of kilter with the
line potential and arcing through the power supply. I'm using a
surge supressor designed to protect video equipment: it has both
AC outlets and feedthroughs with varistor or gas tube clamps to
keep the various relative voltages in check. Of course the best
lightning protection is to disconnect the receiver, but I'm a bit
absent minded so I need a backup.
I suspect part of the reason I see so much noise from neighbors'
appliances on my electric lines may be that my house's main ground
wire is quite long. The electrical service comes in at the south
corner of the house (which is where the breaker box is), while the
water (to which the ground wire is clamped) enters at the east corner.
All perfectly up to code and okay at 60 Hz, but lousy at RF: if
it was shorter, presumably more of the noise current would want
to go that way, and stay away from my receiver.
If you try to get maximum signal transfer with a short loaded (resonant)
vertical antenna with a radiation resistance of, say, 10 ohms, 20
ohms of ground resistance is going to be a big deal. If you're transmitting
50 kW, your ground resistance had better be *really* tiny or things
are going to smoke, melt or arc.
On the other hand, a ground with a resistance of 20 ohms is going
to be fairly effective at grounding a cable with a common mode characteristic
impedance of a few hundred ohms (the characteristic impedance printed
on the cable is for the differential mode; the common mode characteristic
impedance depends somewhat on the distance of the cable from other
conductors, but is usually in the range of hundreds of ohms). Of
course, if it was lower a single ground might do the whole job (but
watch out for mutual inductance coupling separate conductors as
they approach your single ground).
In addition, a ground with a resistance of 20 ohms is fine for an
unbalanced antenna fed with a high impedance transformer to supress
resonance. Such a nonresonant antenna isn't particularly efficient,
but high efficiency is not required for good reception at HF and
below (not true for VHF and especially microwave frequencies).
Much antenna lore comes from folks with transmitters who, armed
with the "reciprocity" principle, assume that reception
is the same problem. The reciprocity principle says that an antenna's
transmission and reception properties are closely related: it's
good physics, but it ignores the fact that the virtues required
of a transmitting and receiving antenna are somewhat different.
Inefficiency in a transmitting antenna has a direct, proportional
effect on the received signal to noise ratio. On the other hand,
moderate inefficiency in an HF receiving antenna usually has a negligible
effect on the final result. A few picowatts of excess noise on a
transmitting antenna has no effect on its function, but is a big
deal if you're receiving (of course, one might not want to have
transmitter power going out via unintended paths like utility lines:
this is indeed the "reciprocal" of the conducted noise
problem, and has similar solutions).
AMSAT Echo Satellite
Launched Successfully
July 2004
At 0630UTC on the 28th of June the http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/echo
AMSAT Echo amateur radio satellite was successfully launched from
the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Telemetry from the satellite
can be received on 435.150MHz FM. The 10-inch-square microsat, equipped
with a transmitter capable of up to 7 watts output, will allow voice
communications using handheld FM transceivers. However, AMSAT requests
that amateurs do not transmit to Echo until checkout and commissioning
has been completed and the satellite is made available for general
use.
There will be a presentation on Echo at the http://www.uk.amsat.org\t
AMSAT-UK Space Symposium which is being held from the 30th of July
to 1st of August at the University of Surrey, Guildford. This event
is open to all radio amateurs and SWLs and for further information
on it please contact the AMSAT-UK secretary, Jim Heck, G3WGM, on
01 258 453 959 or e-mail: g3wgm@amsat.org
Astronaut and
Cosmonaut Operate Simultaneously from ISS
Staying in space and - for the first time - an astronaut and a cosmonaut
have been on the air simultaneously from both of the ARISS operating
positions on the Space Station. Astronaut Mike Fincke, KE5AIT, operating
as NA1SS, made about 60 contacts on 2 metres during the ARRL Field
Day last weekend, while Expedition 9 Commander Gennady Padalka,
RN3DT, operated on 70-centimetres as RS0ISS. Thanks to the http://www.arrl.org
ARRL for this news story.
Actor and radio
amateur Marlon Brando is a Silent Key
One of the best-known names in cinematic as well as amateur radio
circles, actor Marlon Brando, died on the 1st of July at the age
of 80. Known to hams world-wide as KE6PZH and FO5GJ, Brando is listed
on the FCC database as Martin Brandeaux. He was on the air occasionally
through the years with his FO5 callsign from his private island
in French Polynesia. In an interview with Larry King on CNN recorded
in 1994 and shown again this week, Brando confirmed his continued
interest in amateur radio. In response to a caller's question, he
said amateur radio provided him with the opportunity to "just
be himself".
From RSGB
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